

The technology works impressively well in practice. Or a comparable groove, the same mood and so on. Accordingly, Sononym can not only find samples that also have C3 as the base note, but those that contain a similar melody to the original. The same applies to groove, volume and the other properties. If this sounds complicated, it can quickly be explained by using a sung melody as example: the melody does not just contain the pitch C3, but an entire melody. These properties are not only described by an average value, but can vary over the duration of the sample. In Sononym, samples are not just static numbers such as maximum volume and length, but also divided into properties such as brightness, harmony, noise, spectrum, pitch, pitch, and volume. On the other hand - and this is the actual strength of the program - Similarity Search makes it possible to find similar and related sounds. However, the application goes two big steps further: On the one hand Sononym analyzes not only the RMS volume but also pitch and tempo of the samples, which makes finding and sorting much easier. Favorites can be collected in collections and filtered lists by category, as well as sort by different criteria. That is, imported folders are scanned and their content is divided into categories such as oneshot, loop, sweeps, snares, and so on. Featuresīy design and principle, Sononym resembles the previously tested Samplism. At least that’s what the developer is promising. Or your can use Sononym and find them within a few seconds. Do you miss a groove for the bassline? Or a pad for the song? Usually this means searching the sample library for hours in order to find suitable sounds. Such situations are part of everyday life in studio or production work. Everything fits, it only needs to sound a bit more complete, and a couple of additional effects would be nice. The track is cool, the melody is catchy, the beat grooves.
